Friday, October 16, 2015

LOOK AT THIS !!!

A few nice free image downloads images I found:

LOOK AT THIS !!!Image by fabiogis50IT LOOKS THAT THIS PICTURE COMES FROM A MOVIE SET, I'M NOT GOING TO TAKE IT AWAY BECAUSE IT REPRESENTS ANYWAY THE CHINESE STYLE TO SOLVE THEIR POLITICAL PROBLEMS, WITH LIES AND VIOLENCE

Just in case you wondered why these 'Tibetan monks' were so violent inLhasa.... because they were NOT monks, but chinese soldiers.... Chinesesoldiers posing as Tibetan monks during the riotsCanada Free Press[Friday, March 21, 2008 10:20] Brit spies confirm DalaiLama's report of staged violenceBy Gordon ThomasLondon, March 20 - Britain's GCHQ, the government communications agency thatelectronically monitors half the world from space, has confirmed the claimby the Dalai Lama that agents of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, thePLA, posing as monks, triggered the riots that have left hundreds ofTibetans dead or injured.GCHQ analysts believe the decision was deliberately calculated by theBeijing leadership to provide an excuse to stamp out the simmering unrest inthe region, which is already attracting unwelcome world attention in therun-up to the Olympic Games this summer.For weeks there has been growing resentment in Lhasa, Tibet's capital,against minor actions taken by the Chinese authorities.Increasingly, monks have led acts of civil disobedience, demanding the rightto perform traditional incense burning rituals. With their demands go criesfor the return of the Dalai Lama, the 14th to hold the high spiritualoffice.Committed to teaching the tenets of his moral authority---peace andcompassion---the Dalai Lama was 14 when the PLA invaded Tibet in 1950 and hewas forced to flee to India from where he has run a relentless campaignagainst the harshness of Chinese rule.But critics have objected to his attraction to film stars. Newspaper magnateRupert Murdoch has called him: 'A very political monk in Gucci shoes.'Discovering that his supporters inside Tibet and China would become evenmore active in the months approaching the Olympic Games this summer, Britishintelligence officers in Beijing learned the ruling regime would seek anexcuse to move and crush the present unrest.That fear was publicly expressed by the Dalai Lama. GCHQ's satellites,geo-positioned in space, were tasked to closely monitor the situation.The doughnut-shaped complex, near Cheltenham racecourse, is set in thepleasant Cotswolds in the west of England. Seven thousand employees includethe best electronic experts and analysts in the world. Between them theyspeak more than 150 languages. At their disposal are 10,000 computers, manyof which have been specially built for their work.The images they downloaded from the satellites provided confirmation theChinese used agent provocateurs to start riots, which gave the PLA theexcuse to move on Lhasa to kill and wound over the past week.What the Beijing regime had not expected was how the riots would spread, notonly across Tibet, but also to Sichuan, Quighai and Gansu provinces, turninga large area of western China into a battle zone.The Dalai Lama has called it 'cultural genocide' and has offered to resignas head of the protests against Chinese rule in order to bring peace. Thecurrent unrest began on March 10, marking the anniversary of the 1959Uprising against Chinese rule.However, his followers are not listening to his 'message of compassion.'Many of them are young, unemployed and dispossessed and reject hisphilosophy of non-violence, believing the only hope for change is theradical action they are now carrying out.For Beijing, the urgent need to find a solution to the uprising is one ofgrowing embarrassment. In two weeks time, the national celebrations for theOlympic Games start with the traditional torch relay. The torch bearers arescheduled to pass through Tibet. But the torch could find itself beingcarried by runners past burning buildings and temples.A sign of this urgency is that the Chinese prime minister has now said he isprepared to hold talks with the Dalai Lama. Just before this announcement,Britain's Prime Minister Gordon Brown declared he would meet the Dalai Lama,who is to visit London next month. This is the first time either leader hasproposed to meet the Dalai Lama.